What my burnt kitchen taught me about hospitality

My guilty pleasure is scrolling down the streets of Instagram. I especially like the Toddler Moms‘ Street! There’s an immediate consolation I feel knowing I am not alone, and in most cases, I burst out in laughter because what I thought was unbearable; others had it in higher doses (don’t judge me, that’s why I call it a guilty pleasure).

Those streets have changed with time. I used to avoid them before because they only showed me picture-perfect families; not only could I not relate to them, but it put unnecessary pressure on me. But with time, the inhabitants of the street have started showing us, behind the scenes, the messy parts (and, in some cases, how they either embraced it or got out of it).

Today, I will share one of my messy hospitality behind the scenes and the lessons I learned from the experience. It’s not an easy post—in fact, I never thought I would be writing about it. I had another post planned for today, but during my devotion this morning, I came across two passages that made me understand that I had to share this story and its lessons. You can skip to the end if you only want to know the lessons.

 He replied, “If they kept quiet, the stones along the road would burst into cheers!” Luke 19:40

He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we can give them the same comfort God has given us.2 Corinthians 1:4

The story and testimony

We went to bed one night in January with joyful expectations because it was our daughter’s birthday the following day. But things didn’t go as planned. The fire alarm woke us up at about 3 am! The lights were out, so it was a hurdle to find our way to the source of the fire.

Our kitchen was burning (picture at the end of the post); you can imagine the panic and chaos. The birthday girl got up crying, but we were trying to extinguish the fire.

God helped us, and with the help of a fire extinguisher, my husband put out the fire. Some neighbours came to help, and the firefighters came in in under 5 minutes, so we had to evacuate the building. They took us to the hospital for a routine checkup, and everyone was fine.

It is an understatement to say that I am grateful to God for preservation. We lost some property, but that’s nothing compared to a healthy family. Glory be to God!

The lessons learnt

Part 1

I had plans for my daughter’s birthday and saw those plans burn before my eyes. The daycare had said only plain cakes were allowed. Ah ah, what is a plain cake that I can not bake? I had to bake a cake, but that was no longer possible! The thought of buying store-bought items made me feel like an unworthy mom (looking back, I ask myself, by whose standards really).

Finally, I bought the things and gave them to the daycare, and as usual, I felt unnecessary pressure to explain myself and why I didn’t bake myself. The teacher laughed at me well, saying other moms didn’t bake theirs either, and I did not have to stress it. She sent us pictures of how the kids enjoyed the birthday, and that was lesson 1

Lesson 1: Don’t compare your hospitality to others. It adds to your stress for nothing.

Part 2

I serve in the ushering department in my church, and all our meetings have either been online or in church. I advocated for meetings to rotate in people’s houses so we could get to know each other better. As usual, when someone suggests something in a meeting, that one ends up being the one to do it! (makes you think hard before suggesting something). I agreed, but said it will only be possible once my kitchen was ready.

Unfortunately, the repairs took much longer than anticipated, but the meeting still had to be held. I had to preach to myself (and my husband did a good job at it, too). How can I say that hospitality isn’t about being perfect or showcasing, yet I was withholding a hospitality opportunity here because my home was not ideal?

Hahaha, don’t get it twisted. I am not a great cook, but I have at least 1 or 2 meals that when I cook, you will think I have ‘killed it’. Anyway, I decided to heed my advice and invited them anyway. I ordered food and served on the table. When people congratulated me for the good meal, saying it wasn’t me who cooked, didn’t feel as heavy as I thought. I am glad I invited them; we all had a great time and got to know ourselves better.

Lesson 2: What matters in hospitality is a willing and available heart.

Part 3

One would think that I would have understood the message by now, but no! I still shied away from hospitality opportunities until the insurance replaced my kitchen.

One old couple, for instance, we have been planning this after-church invite forever. Finally, my kitchen got repaired (picture below at the end of the post), and we could finally set a date.

Hehehe, as God wants you to graduate from his course, the new kitchen plate was faulty and had to be replaced, taking another week or so. But we had already invited them and could not undo them. Plus, two more people had added to the visit!

By this time, I had already become skilled in oven meals and had acquired a multicooker. I refused to panic and did what I could without feeling guilty. Needless to say, we had great conversations that day.

Lesson 3: Make do with what you have; it doesn’t have to be fancy.

All in all, the experience was not pleasurable, but God turned it around for our good.

  • I experienced hospitality as a guest. Because of the smoke, we could not immediately head home, so a family hosted us for the day.
  • We experienced God’s provision in many ways. A family brought us a whole bag of groceries without much preparation. One of the workers brought two big cartons of toys and books for our kids, just to name a few.
  • Insurance covered the cost, so now we know never to joke with insurance.
  • I got to learn many new oven recipes (post for another day)
  • Through all this, we met many new people, some of whom have become valuable connections to this day.

Conclusion

Here is the summary of the 3 major hospitality lessons learnt

  1. Don’t compare your hospitality to others. It adds to your stress for nothing.
  2. What matters in hospitality is a willing and available heart.
  3. Make do with what you have; it doesn’t have to be fancy.

How about you? What situation is keeping you from practising hospitality? Are you waiting to move into your own house first? Or maybe a bigger house? Are you waiting for ‘one money like that’ before you start? Or maybe to top up your kitchen skills first?

Remember, hospitality is not necessarily an event; it’s a lifestyle and doesn’t need to be fancy; it just needs to be available!

Do you have any messy hospitality stories to share? Please comment below. Remember to like and share.

Until next time!

After the incident

(Image 1: The incident Image 2: After repairs)

23 responses to “What my burnt kitchen taught me about hospitality”

  1. Josephe Lagrande Avatar
    Josephe Lagrande

    Awesome lessons ! But I didn’t know about this fire incident 😮 we thank God for preservation

    Liked by 2 people

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      Truly, thanks be to God

      Like

  2. JOLLY Avatar
    JOLLY

    This was so thoughtfully written. Thank you for the lessons. I am trying to be a welcoming person but I don’t return invitations. I don’t know if that counts and how do I navigate through visiting people especially as I don’t naturally like to.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      Glad to hear you are on your way to being more welcoming. The giver also needs to learn how to receive 😉. You can also get a lot of inspiration on how to better your hospitality by receiving hospitality from others. So my encouragement to you is to give it a try. Also if you keep rejecting offers, it’s counter productive to be more welcoming as people will think you’re not interested. I will end with finding that right balance because we can’t also accept all offers due to time constraints. More grace 🤗

      Like

  3. Koge Mekang Avatar

    This has to be my favorite blog post. I enjoy when I learn a lesson or two from stories.
    I remember I will postpone people visiting me a lot because of the cost of serving food to them (I would cry my little 5k pocket money lol), but now I will “Do with what I have”. Thank you so much for the story and the lessons and please more stories😁.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      Thanks mama TRIH 🤗…🤗 a handshake, and a smile don’t cost a thing 😉 Crancran is like 50frs and fried eggs can go for like 200frs 😂

      Liked by 1 person

  4. ayuketahpearl Avatar
    ayuketahpearl

    Sorry about what you went through. 😊 Happy you came out of it all with a beautiful kitchen and nice lessons

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar
  5. Sstar Lem Avatar
    Sstar Lem

    hospitality is not necessarily an event, its a lifestyle… thank you for sharing. These are lessons I won’t be forgetting in a hurry…

    sorry about the fire accident, Glad you all came out of it safe .

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      Thanks a lot 🙏🏾

      Like

  6. Adrien Nobel Mbougue Avatar

    Great lessons. Thanks for sharing. I have learnt a lot.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Linda Eva Seuna Avatar

    🧡 Thanks for this reminder that hospitality isn’t about Instagram-perfect setups but showing up authentically for people we care about. Sometimes our “broken” moments create the most meaningful connections.

    🙌🏾 Glad to know you’re all safe now!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Ma Salo Avatar
    Ma Salo

    GOD’s love matters above all.Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith. Prov 15:17 KJ. GOD’s love is sufficient. The Bible says in 1 Tim 6:6 GODliness with contentment is great gain. We should not relent in any way to share that love in its pure form. GOD’s love matters beyond everything else. The sophistication of a physical mansion cannot replace GOD’s love. Let what matters to GOD be exalted above all else. I am glad that circumstances forced you to capture the shared lessons and pray you live above these concerns now that you attest their emptiness towards attaining your objectives. They melted before your eyes as you still did everything without them whereas it sounded as though nothing could be done without them. My lesson from your experience is a reawakening of my consciousness of the fact that nothing in this world would satisfy but JESUS is the cup that won’t run dry. Thanks for sharing Hildy!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      Very powerful; thanks for sharing Ma Salo

      Like

  9. Salome Avatar
    Salome

    No one can give what he or she doesn’t have.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Joannie Avatar
    Joannie

    Amazing Story. Thank you for sharing and really sorry for what you and your family went through. Glad however, that beautiful lessons came out of that experience. It is indeed true that everthing works for the good of those who love God…

    Funny though , that YOU are part of my messy hospitality experience/ story and the guilt of that still lives rent free in my head. Hihihi

    Please , I am expecting the post on oven cooked meals/recipes you learned in the process.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. InsideOut Hospitality Avatar

      🤣 I honestly have no recollection of whatever could have been that mess so please send it packing 😜

      Like

  11. Pascale Tabi Avatar
    Pascale Tabi

    Thank you so much for this lessons. They indeed relive from pressure. May God continue to inspire you

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Emma Woks Avatar

    I’m so sorry you went through this. I’m glad God preserved you and your family and that you received the support needed. 🙏🏽 

    Thank you for sharing your story and lessons learned. ✨

    Regarding your question about our messy hospitality experiences, one lesson that stands out to me whenever I walk down memory lane is to cultivate an atmosphere that favours hospitality from “inside”/a heart of love and not only from a place of duty, as well as fostering meaningful and genuine connections.

    Liked by 1 person

  13. Ekun Avatar
    Ekun

    Thank you for the lessons shared. I also love the concise writing. Let me now put into practice!

    Liked by 1 person

  14. christellebewa0 Avatar
    christellebewa0

    Thank God for preservation of life. He kept you and your family safe. When you talk about hospitality, one thing The Holy Spirit started teaching and urging me at the beginning of this year. He said don’t wait until you make it big, start with the little. At the beginning it was a bit «bizzare», but now it is fine. Thank you for sharing your story and the lessons learnt.

    Powerful lessons I just learned. The summary says it all. I remember when you told me about the kitchen, your calmness is to be applauded. Thank you for sharing the story.

    Don’t compare your hospitality to others. It adds to your stress for nothing.

    What matters in hospitality is a willing and available heart.

    Make do with what you have; it doesn’t have to be fancy.

    Thank you once again.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. crazierfate Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your insights so concisely. Life often teaches us lessons the hard way. I sometimes struggle with hospitality, but I hope that with the guidance of the Holy Spirit, I can improve after reading this. The fire incident could have been a very scary moment , but thank God for using it for his glory, from which we are now benefiting. God bless you!

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to JOLLY Cancel reply

I’m Hilda

Welcome to my cozy little happy space. I love Jesus and I am passionate about making others feel comfortable and welcome. I believe outside hospitality becomes easier when it comes from the inside (heart of love), hence the name Inside-Out Hospitality.

Join me as we explore together how to make the world a cozier place.

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